156 Mo. 597 | Mo. | 1900
This is an action by plaintiff, assignee of the Bank .of Salisbury, against the defendants Finks, Walton and Blakev, upon a note for the sum of five thousand dollars, less credits, executed by defendants to one Joseph Allin on the 13th day of June, 1890, and by Allin assigned to said Bank of Salisbury.
The petition alleges: “That on the 13th day of June, 1890, defendants executed and delivered to one Joseph Allin their promissory note, herewith filed, by which they promised to pay to the order of said Joseph Allin, for value received, twelve months after date, the sum of five thousand dollars with interest thereon from date at the rate of ten per cent per annum, and if the interest be not paid annually, to become as principal and bear the same rate of interest. That on the 7th day of August, 1891, said Joseph Allin, for value, assigned said note, without recourse, by writing on the back thereof, to said Bank of Salisbury, which said note is now owned and held by plaintiff as assignee of said bank. That there was paid on said note interest as follows: July 7, 1892, four hundred and nine dollars and forty-nine cents; July 7, 189-1, eight hundred and ninety-three dollars and forty-five cents, which payments.are entered on the back of said note; that the balance of said note and the accrued interest thereon are due and unpaid. Wherefore plaintiff prays judgment for the amount of said note with the accrued interest thereon, computed with annual rests, and for costs of suit.”
Defendant Blakey by separate answer admits the incorporation of the Bank of Salisbury; the assignment of the bank to plaintiff; the execution of the note sued on, and the assignment thereof after maturity to said bank. The answer then alleges that he executed said note, of which said bank had full knowledge, as security of defendant Joseph H.
“And for further defense this defendant affirms that after the sale and delivery of said note to said bank, and before the execution of the deed of assignment to plaintiff, said bank at all times and continuously intrusted said note
Plaintiff replied to the separate answer of defendant Walton denying-each and every allegation therein contained, except as specifically admitted therein. It then admits that after the transfer of the note in qxiestion to the hank, P. B. Branham did draw lines with pen and ink over and across the name of defendant Blakey, on said note; that said act of Branham was without the knowledge, consent and authority of the board of directors of said bank or any one authorized to release said Blakey from liability on said note, either as joint maker or as security for J. H. Pinks and T. H. Walton, who were his principals.
To the separate answer of the defendant Blakey, plaintiff made reply denying each and every allegation of new matter contained therein not specifically admitted. The reply then proceeds as follows: “Plaintiff admits that defendant Walton did give to said defendant Blakey a statement in Avriting to the effect that said Blakey’s name Avas not on any note due or given to the Bank of Salisbury, and that said Blakey was not indebted to said bank in any sum whatever,
Defendant Einks made default.
The facts briefly stated are that on the 13th day of June, 1890, the defendants Einks and Walton as principals, and Y. O. Blakey as surety, all of them then officers of the Bank of Salisbury, borrowed of one Joseph Allin $5,000 and thereafter Einks and Walton as agents of said bank purchased for it said note, which was assigned by Allin to said bank after maturity without recourse upon Allin. The note wras carried by the bank for, several years without renewal.
P. B. Branham was the book-keeper and assistant cashier of the bank. There was nothing in the rules or bvlaAvs of the bank deiining the duties of assistant cashier.
During the absence of the cashier Einks, and while the president 'Walton, and the assistant cashier Branham, were
Uuder this state of facts, plaintiff, during the trial to the court and jury, offered in evidence the note sued upon, which upon objection by defendants was excluded, and not allowed to be read. Whereupon plaintiff excepted to the ruling of the court, tool?: a nonsuit, and after unsuccessful motion to set the same aside and for a new trial appeals.
It is asserted by plaintiff that the court erred in refusing to permit him to read in evidence the note sued on, while upon the other hand it is argued that it was not necessary under the pleadings to a recovery upon the note that it should be read in evidence, and therefore plaintiff was not forced to take a nonsuit but did so voluntarily.
Nonsuits are of two kinds, voluntary and involuntary.
It is however asserted, by plaintiff, that counsel, for defendants have assumed an entirely different position in this court from that which they took in the court below, and that they ought not to be permitted to do so; but however this may be, it does not in any manner change the character of the nonsuit, which was clearly, we think, voluntary.
The judgment is affirmed.